Last year's bicentennial of Britain's outlawing of the Atlantic slave trade inspired a host of scholarly and popular commemorations: conferences, exhibitions, even a big-budget film, Amazing Grace, that made an unlikely matinee idol of William Wilberforce. All these events took place in an atmosphere suffused with self-congratulation. The crusade against the trade and the government's eventual response offers a usable past for a society increasingly aware of its multiracial character: a chapter of history of which all Britons can be proud.
LRB 31 July 2008 | PDF Download
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